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Village Squire, 1977-08, Page 34P. S. I'll just learn to live with what I've got I guess I guess I'll just never be "with it". I mean the other day I was listening to the radio, the Betty Kennedy show on one of the Toronto stations, and there was this whole long interview with a cosmetic surgeon. That, for you equally un -with -it souls out there, is the socially acceptable name for a plastic surgeon. The difference is that plastic surgeons usually spend their time sewing people back together who have been badly deformed by accidents or other causes. Cosmetic surgeons just try to improve what imperfect mother nature gave each of us for physique. The man was going on an on about his work the fact that he performed hundreds of facelifts a year that he filled out bustlines here, deflated them there, that he added to backsides or reduced them and did a hundred and one little tricks to make people look better than they really were. And, he assured the listeners, it was all quite reasonable in cost, even if it wasn't covered by O.H.I.P. Just a few hundred (seven I think it was) for a simple facelift and more according to the difficulty for such things as a nose job. He added the fact that there were about 30 such practioners in Toronto, all kept quite busy and that the practice was becoming more fashionable. Now if I wasn't such a slob, I should have been rejoicing and rushing right out to sign up. After all, I certainly have need of his services. Heck, I have so many things wrong with my appearance that I should donate my body for practice at the cosmetic surgeons' school. It would probably take a whole class their entire internship to turn this wreck of physique into a decent looking specimen. But I guess I've just lived with this body too long because I couldn't get worked up over the idea of changing it. I mean one way to kill any such thoughts quickly is that "reasonable cost" the doctor talks about but even if it was $3.95 for a nose job, I don't think I'd bother. Lord knows if anybody needs a nose job it's me, but I've lived with this Mount Everest of noses for 30 years now and somehow I'm used to it. I've taken enough cracks, both real and imagined about this beak over the years to know why people would want to change their appearance. There was even a time when I might have been tempted if I'd had the chance, back in those teenager years when every one of my seven million -- 11 VTT.T.A GE SOUIRE/AUGUST 1977. freckles made me ache to have clear skin (or alternatively, I used to wish the freckles would gang up to give me a nice solid brown colour instead of the pastey white in winter and burned red in summer that I usually sported). Those were the days I learned to hate mirrors. I still find myself very uncomfortable in one of those places where your image is reflected in six different mirrors from every direction you turn. I avoid mirrors as much as possible nowadays. I've learned to live with a less_ than perfect. (Ed. note: now there's the understatement of the year) physique. I've gone so far that I also save myself a fortune by not worrying about wearing the latest fashion. I wear my shoes until they fall apart. I have some shirts in my closet that I had when I got married, and I get to the barber about half as often as I should. To people meeting me for the first time, I must look like a walking fashion horror show but I think my friends have learned to accept me as myself and my enemies need some more ammunition anyway. As for myself, I've developed a sort of faceless mental image of myself over the years. I see myself not exactly as handsome, but not ugly either: a sort of faceless wonder who exists only in thought. These people who run around getting facelifts etc. are always worried about their image. Frankly, in the past few years, I've been too busy doing things to be worried about what people think about my image. I know that there must be some people chuckling when they see me and some perhaps even laughing but as long as I can't hear them, what harm does it do, and if I'm too busy doing things I think are important, then how am I going to have time to hear them? As far as I'm concerned now, if they have so little to do that they can sit around and laugh at the physical appearance of others, then it's their problem not mine. These are the compromises that we all must learn to live with. Sure if I had good looks, I'd probably glory in them and wonder how all those ordinary less -than - beautiful people managed to get along. But when you don't have it, you pretend you don't need it, the same as an ordinary soul doesn't see the need to be a genius. No matter what you're given to work with in this life, you've got to learn to live with it. If you can't, it's a psychiatrist you need, not a cosmetic surgeon. ti s Cep 4 J. ,41IaII f fi'r IlpEd�lU�liN�;;t"" II1 Buildall helps you welcome wmm¢r, beautifully! s i Now that winter is over, your home could probably do with a little repair work. Ice and snow can do a lot of damage to asphalt driveways, fences and painted surfaces. Buildall can help your home face the spring, and continue looking great all through the summer months. All it takes is a little time, a little know-how and the right materials to do the job. At Buildall, we can giv: you the advice to do an expert lob. We can offer you the best quality building supplies you could hope to find anywhere. And we can tell you that the best time to begin your renovations is now. Think how attractive a new patio deck would look. Or how about a handy garden storage building to help keep track of all your outdoor equipment? 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